new name, new address: neonresolutions.tumblr.com



Wednesday, June 29, 2005

?


?
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

where i usually post my long serial photo blog entries in the opposite chronological order, so the reader, casual browser does not have to sc roll down then up to read about my mundane cosmopolitan adventures, this morning sees me too jetlagged and floaty to even attempt a-chronological actions, let alone thoughts. so scrolldown to the first picture in the sequence and all will be explained. today will take me to amsterdam where public transportation is on strike and i will be hanging with my dutch metropolitan friends, all of whom will receive 'i heart ny' shirts, and seeing 'batman and katie' with sis and her boyf.

my first mac and cheese


my first mac and cheese
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

fannypack with tofu


fannypack with tofu
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

flash close-up


flash close-up
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

our guests mostly wore suitable attire: big hair, tattoos, fake pregnancy bellies, short skirts, platform shoes, handlebar moustache, leggings, huge loopy earrings, fannypacks, more visors and 'the world's greatest bingo player' caps, yet no one stared at them in the subway or when they walked down the street...

white trash roof party


white trash roof dinner
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

the food table had all things trashy, pringles, cheetos, cupcakes, hotdogs, beans and park, cupcakes, macaroni and cheese, cheap vodka, plastic forks (no knives or spoons), more cheese snacks, spray cheese on crackers (truly hideous), canned tomato soup, marshmallows, etc.

vertigo staircase


vertigo staircase
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

so when you throw a housewarming/going-away-for-a-month-to-europe party an dyou think it would be cool to hold it on your roof, when you decide to give it a theme, you know, everybody gets dressed up, brings appropriate food and drinks, when you think, especially inspired by a great junior senior concert, as well as the legions of badly dressed tourists streaming through our street, it would be a great idea to have white trash be that theme and you go to kmart, two subway stops, buy crazy visors, put back that overpriced willie nelson shirt, that too small, really, yes, guns and roses girly wifebeater, get every cheesy snack there plus crazy timewarp drinks in electric colors and plastic containers, when you take 6 shopping bags full of this crap home, then you realize that not only will you have to lug all this beer and those snacks eight flights up to the roof, but, due to the abscence of doorbell and buzzer, you will have run down -slightly intoxicated and in costume: visor, jack-and-coke stained wifebeater, huge five-dollar white sneakers, boxers not merely peeking but comfortable staring from above my new plaid pyjama pants, one leg half rolled up gangsta style, headphone cord tangling around every turn on the stairs - to let everybody in...

sliced clock


sliced clock
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

the famed blinds semi-obscure the clock i have a hard time reading (i prefer the 24-hour digital kind)

room


room + roommate
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

the southwest quadrant of my room, with added 'four tet' balloon, sliced sunset, found bookcase, gold woodpaneling, lomography on the wall, plus reading roommate.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

cool notes from new york

when i went to kmart yesterday, it was my day off, the apartment was stifling and suddenly filled with the newly returned k's possessions, i arrived at the checkout with my new transparent vinyl covered clothing rack only to find i was without my trusty american atm card. panicking only slightly i thought back to the last time i used it, a shopping spree at h&m, pants, socks, shirts? sticky tape to finally attach the japanese tautou to her designated position and to try and fix some of the amazing records i bought at the street fair on saturday (music of the alps, loungy compilations called, sunrise, temptation, or featuring bored housewives with cocktails and fake picket fences) to the gold and white wood paneling, or was it at the dynasty supermarket just above canal street, where i am always the only caucasian shopper, trying to find cheerios among the many different chicken feet and dried sea urchins.
i returned from kmart, huge martha stewart box in tow, to find that the apartment was thrust in an even deeper, but decidedly cooler chaos, since k's too kind fireman brother had sprung for a remote controllable air conditioning unit, which now obscures part of the, according to him, extremely fire hazardous fire escape. i was just about to call the bank and have my card canceled when k suggested i go back to the store and ask if i had left my card there. the jaded city dweller i have become was immensely shocked at the show that unfolded at the supermarket. i spoke to the manager who was extremely helpful and talked to all the checkout girls in turn, one of whom remembered me and in rapid fire chinese directed her boss to my card.
faith in humanity restored, i spent the following hours blissfully unclammy, camped out on the couch correcting a paper on gender mainstreaming for my mom, interrupted by a groovy night out with the archi-pals at the new, and undiscovered hipster hotspot, palais royal complete with the ramones on flatscreen, lingerie drying outside, hidden on the other side of our block among the exterminators and herbal medicine stores of mott street. i returned, pleasantly buzzed on vodka limes, that perennial of summer drinks, strangely unfamiliar to americans. the electronic hum of the airco put me in a buddhist state sedate enough to help sleep the night through without escaped to the kitchen to down huge glasses of icy filtered water or to the cutesy bathroom to dunk my head under the new york tap. i am now just about to finish my recommendations on coupland's eleanor rigby and look forward to the rest of the week, which will bring more visitors, more humidity, a concert by the lcd soundsystem, and more, much more nights of non sweaty, remote controlled sleep. x. f.

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

kismet, dawson, nuclear bombs

after finishing my coverage on the quite rollicking film adaptation of dangerous parking by peter howitt, who wrote and directed sliding doors, i was put to work on an assessment of douglas coupland's latest, eleanor rigby. kismet, since i had read the entire book on the same flight on which i saw howitt's cinematic work of dull boredom the laws of attraction. another very happy coincidence is the fact that one of my due papers is on coupland's use of storytelling as religion. for this heady project i've reread the charming and still mysterious generation x and my former favorite book ever, the now sadly overbearing girlfriend in a coma to mine them for quotes and meaningful notions of faith and hope. coupland's work is hard to get a grip on because it so unabashedly borders on sentimental or, much much worse, inspirational.
still, i'm ever glad to be able to examine my own fascination with his work, just as a did with my other half-explained crushes buffy and dawson's creek, which, thankfully but not unexpectedly, has tumbled a lot of rungs down my ladder of esteem; mainly because of the horrible main characters, never as captivating as the vampire slayer or coupland's lonely storytellers.
having written this, i should probably still admit that i am now rewatching the third season and am just about to head into the final episodes where the show's major twist starts to hit hard. the irritating dawson loses the neurotic joey to his talky best friend, and ultimately preferable teen, pacey and the show died a slow death with only jen, michelle williams, who i just saw in the very odd lobotomy drama a hole in one, to tide the viewers over to the very last and very fine episodes which finally end pacey and joey's arc as they finally hook up at jen's funeral. tears all around and i'll be ready to start my latest netflix obsession, before this one i did bette davis' melodramas and now i'm gearing up for coupland-inspired nuclear war dramas: on the beach, testament, but also my perennial tearjerking favorite, deep impact.
ps my boss just asked me for my thoughts on a hiroshima movie. hmm, kismet, strange but sweet.

strange things i've won

an electric raser when i was eleven
shiny rollerblades i wore only once
a pair of promotional tighty-whities for the movie nowhere
tickets to the gala premiere of the beach that i got a week too late
a new eames chair

Monday, May 30, 2005

summer's here, and it's noisy

my schedule is back to normal and over. had three days of internship this week, just to make up for the stuff i didn't do over their break. quite tiring, weather was very silly and rainy. in this ghastly weather. i was out and about in chinatown one morning, arranging to get back a deposit from a notoriously absentminded real estate agent who we decided not to sign with. struggling with k's wondrous rainbowy umbrella i borrowed for the day, i towered over all the other pedestrians, quite a sight. but nothing compared to what has been going on with my friends in the home country, buying houses, having babies!nothing of that scale happened here; i bought some more domesticities: whisk, bowls, a groovy orange diner tray with matching yellow mustard squeezer, and some of those wooden/bamboo steamers that i've been filling with assorted dumplings and veggies (my favorite so far, the sheherd's veggie one, has frustratingly sold out, so now i'm forced to wander the aisles in search of a worthy succesor to the mighty dumpling crown). a japanese poster has also been procured from the workplaced: sadly not the shiny one with brittany murphy and jason schwartzmann for 'spun' (made by the company i work for) but a 'dirt pretty things one' of a very demure and mysterious apres-amelie audrey tautou who keeps falling from her designated piece of wall opposite the fridge-window. a drawing of a dirty car on the side of the fridge made by a hugely talented 2-and-a-half-year-old import has also been added to the mix. in other mulby news, the exterminator came one morning, apparently he comes every month, and he was happy to see no trace of buggythingies, yay for swiffer!
friday everything suddenly turned summer: glorious, sunny, and very busy as the saint anthony festival is in full swing on la mulberry. a shooting range with human target, overpriced daiquiris, and fairly badly aged drumbands. with this background, i read some more wildly anticipated scripts (the prestigious, if slightly dull new darren aronofsky, the new paul auster and 'black book' by paul verhoeven! yay for the low countries) these afternoons have been lovely, wandering around the neighborhood with canadian girls, always a pleasure. i followed that on saturday with some odd and obscure cinema by michael powell of 'the red shoes' fame (the boy who turned yellow, anyone? nobody?) and a night of 8-bit gameboy music and videogame art in dumbo, brooklyn. i will be spending memorial day doing some work and enjoying a barbecue in shiny park slope. the rest of this week will bring two of my idols to the city as both chuck palahniuk and david sedaris are reading and signing at the local b&n. more inspired postings are sure to follow. x f.

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

four pictures


taxi to jfk
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

i took this photo when i rushed to jfk to pick up my sister. the others are vague leftovers i found in the drainpipe of iphoto, mood setting but hardly narrative.


manhattan from a cab
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.


shiny passing subway
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.


misty view
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

more sample madness

one long day: by the end of it i will have writen more than i have in the past week. has it really been just seven days since many of my friend here left? like i've tried to explain before my sense of time is seriously kaufman-esque at this stage of my life. much or little happens but i cannot seem to accurately quantify its duration in newtonian terms. einsteinian would probably work better if my mind would be able to process relativist physics and since i have trouble getting simple blinds to lower i think that would be too much of a crazy endeavor.
nothing much happened: more sandbox, paperwork for visa, fixed blinds for good (they now raise AND lower), fixed that blinking light on my phone, did dishes, went to laundromat, tried to book tickets all over europe (holland-venice, venice-vienna,
by train, ahh the good life and on the day harry potter comes out too!, vienna-holland, holland-new york), and watched a ton of movies (rosemary's baby, the lady eve, the searchers, house of flying daggers, etc.) now at work, didn't do any of my coverages over 'break', oops, so am now forced to stare at a huge pile of great great scripts while i finish my old ones, grrr, anyway, bruce willis ends up in jail, but happy, while my current subject features classic moments such as: "At home in London, Alex surprises his too glamorous American housekeeper, JACK, as she is practicing her sushi-slicing skills." i'm so there.
today has once again reminded me of the immense joy i have at this job. so silly, so fast, so good. the taunting pile contains the new robert altman, with lindsay lohan!, a new paul auster script, as well as film versions of some of my friends' favorite novels: the night listener and veronika decides to die. much to look forward too then...

Saturday, May 21, 2005

these days, lazily sampled from email

thursday: "yesterday brought me through central park where me and the kid fauxfished, looked at the weird little copcars, and he did the thing where he runs up a hill, stops, giggles, falls over, and rolls down. never a dull moment, when you're twoandahalf and high on summer and half an apple.
i had many a moment of fluky mindlessness on my way to return sexy but too small blinds to kmart (forgot measurements, returned home, left them down the stairs while i ran up, came back down, they were gone, ran outside, just caught the landlord trashing them, got hem back, went to kmart, didn't have my wallet, they didn't have my size, grrr, i'm off to home depot.)
i then discovered that netflix are sending my movies to nr 18 instead of 19, so i explained in my suckiest spanish (posta? envelopa? roja?) and got my first disc so now i can have odd memories and dawson for breakfast"
after a very gloomy friday (not only was it sort of wishy washy rainy, but i also finished gilmore girls season three, fire!, jess!, pregnacy! and disc one of my ultimate sick and guilty pleasure dawson's creek, the season where joey en pacey hook up, jen gets chased by michael pitt and dawson and andie chew up valuable screen time with unexpressive foreheads and incredibly lame teen depresssion.)
today, saturday: "got up, watched some rosemary's baby (it's been taking me days now, it just won't end, or get really scary, although the concept of being in a half-furnished new york apartment with weird noises (this morning 7:30 the opening sequence of lotr, i've had worse) feels familiar, mia farrow is cool though, the original gwyneth) then braved subway chaos to get to home depot, 2 stops downtown local, several uptown express, then 9 blocks walking to return the too short blinds i bought yesterday, also found out i'd need a drill. now you might think a drill moi? exactly. never used one, but i still got on that local subway downtown, suddenly running all the way, and started drilling. the effect: a set of very shiny horizontal blinds, a very good moment to quote the dutch translation luxaflex, much cooler than blinds, huh?
did some cereal shopping, got a slightly larger size of my heart tshirt from the young designer's market up the street (i bought it with caroline, off white with an anatomical drawing of a heart over mine and a red bloody stripe through it that looks very funny when worn under a jacket) and proceeded to clean my house in it, floor wetswiffed, one window scrubbed and windexed. i could suddenly see the weather outside. it was lovely, sunny and touristy all day, but around half past five a summer storm strook up and the entire city was bathed in yellow light, the kind you find in belgian tunnels at night. you might be thinking he extrapolates, exagerrates, but really full on wong kar wai yellow (who i'm going to see with c. at the new york premiere of 2046!) gorgeous, especially on the red buildings on my street, the yellow cabs and the white face of the police station's clock, now sandwiched and sliced by my shiny blinds."

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

post from work

although i am smack in the middle of my coverage on a quite dull quasi remake of 'the river wild' starring morgan freeman as kevin bacon and the usually ever enjoyable, but here just paying his bills, john cusack as meryl streep, i just though i'd present more random snatches of new york life. i went home for lunch today, just 15 minutes away now, and cleaned some more of the furniture i picked off the street after me, g, and k. and his merry gang of architects had the sudden use of a pickup truck (very out of place in the city) and packed and moved k's stuff in a few hours late last night. i am now the proud owner of this random set of found furniture: a huge antique traveling chest (also usable as coffee table or extension of my windowsill), a previously bug-infested bookcase able to hold all of my cd's and books, plus two chairs, one baby size serving as a makeshift bedside (although i don't have a bed yet) table and one fifties style chair to go with k's card table. strange, one day there was no furniture and now the place is starting to look more habitable by the day. back to the movie...

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

oddly european view from my bedroom/fire escape


my view
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

the neo-classical tower has once been the home of cher and is now occupied by none other than sofia coppola. i'd like to think that when i stretch in the mornings, dear sofia watches benevolently. i also has a clock that lights up at night so that i know what time it is. the glare of the many-coloured party bulbs of all the italian restaurants prevents me from knowing whether it it is morning already or just the onset of twilight.
celebrated the new place yesterday with our first piece of new york street furniture, a soho filing cabinet marked paid bills. good sign, i thought. afterwards there were "big" wontons at chinatown's wonderfully achromal "wonton garden" and then my initiation in what is most commonly known as karaoke. i remember whitney, bon jovi, the carpenters (superstar, ahhh), a rousing version of "how is the weather?" by the turtles and finally that song made famous by tiffany. very silly, and weird to think this kind of crucial asian-americana is mere blocks away.
back to the atheist children's trilogy presentation now, will post more pics and stories of tomorrow's amazing quadruple bill of four tet, manitoba/caribou, junior boys, and the russian futurists. also mere blocks away from the place i artfully decorated with pictures of mexican films and sites of celebrity deaths and now dare to start calling home. as ever, f.

untitled roof access


DSCF0788
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

it's the war of the limos and extended hummers every weekend night on mulberry street


the war of the limos
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

the still empty, empty hallway that ends in my bedroom


empty hallway
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

Monday, May 02, 2005

a peephole to apt. 18


peephole
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

water towers? tanks? reservoirs? anyway, essential view material.


DSCF0792
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

Sunday, April 24, 2005

and a kitchen with a view


P4220199
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

all rooms (2 bedrooms, one kitchen, bathroom and one enchanting multifarious dining/entrance chamber) have windows towering over the smaller lodgings all around. the biggest windows look out over our fire escape over the roofs into the opulent former police station, now long since converted into condos for people such as madonna and cindy crawford. quite a change from being ben stiller's neighbour, as i am now, or so i learned today.

my new house...


P4230209
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

just found out today that after two weeks of intense searching, one very wise mulberry street landlord accepted me and my brandnew roommate k. to be the new tenants of this very cute building in the heart of little italy. starting next sunday, i will sometimes appear behind the windows on the upper right hand side and wave at the silly tourists paying way too much for their petty pizzas.

Friday, April 08, 2005

me looking way too busy in my tiny room


DSCF0396
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

long time no post, many things have happened: i saw vincent gallo jam with sean and yoko, saw the real hedwig at a screening of tarnation, had lovely visits from the home continent plus a very bad cold that had me in fevers, coughs and kleenex for about three weeks, a classical concert, including the original version of 'all by myself' at carnegie hall, and finally a trip to the sunny side of this continent followed by a fascinating voyage into the american west at a fulbright conference in the lovely if beige boulder, colorado. I have compiled a short sequence of bits from emails to elucidate on my recent whereabouts:

blue sky with absent whale


DSCF0409
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

blood-like moss on rock at point reyes, ca


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Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

"oh fuck, just got an email saying i'll have to prepare a short
presentation on my country for a high school visit in boulder ('please
bring pictures, items or clothing to help you in this presentation')
i'll have to explain about drugs, euthanasia, gay marriage, and
fucking windmills, passing around black licorice (i should bring some
stroopwafels...). the burdens of being a fulbrighter..."

"the last barbecue" berkeley easter celebration


DSCF0463
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

our entry for dead meat on a stick


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Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

"after a day of dead meat on a stick (a yearly easter meat sculpture contest for which me and my friend matthew entered a lamb and potatoes version of the facehugger of the original 'alien'), we're in the middle of a rainstorm and
the widescreen view of the bay and the golden gate has been engulfed
in mist. the bette davis marathon ('all about eve' with a lovely young marilyn and the chilling 'whatever happened to baby jane?') is soon to be accompanied by some
pad thai. yesterday was sunny, i saw my first whale and a beach full
of elephant seal wieners (aka pups) all in all im very entertained"

view from convertible


DSCF0499
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

"i have read three whole books (philip pullman's gloriously atheist trilogy "His dark materials), rejoice
the sun is out and my disease is slowly passing from my system, rejoice
miss our routines, friday night dinner, one dollar margaritas
silly, silly, roommates, silly
i will see all soon, and will bring tales of
mountains and flowers, bridges and blingbling
these are a few of my favorite things"

my view also contained the golden gate bridge you know, the pictures just did not come out well


DSCF0542
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

"sun enough
more shopping
one book later (Scarlett Thomas wonderful, if slightly preachy popco)
made some gingeryhoneycarrotsoup with spicypepitas and toastedraisinbread
more shopping
apparently there are tennis courts at the hotel so we are encouraged to bring our rackets
hell no
enjoy weather, rejoice"

small town in nevada obscured by cloud


DSCF0567
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

colorado from the plane


DSCF0571
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

beige colorado house


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Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

"spent my morning at a louisville middle school
where me and belgian fulbrighter stephane charmed some 12-year-olds
(they got their principal to ask for our adresses)
many smart people here at the conference, also many nerdy types
sample dialogue:
"so, did you look new york before you moved to new york,
or did you dress like that after?"
tonight will be the crowning moment of this conference,
a home hospitality dinner with real americans
i, like, just cant wait
honestly
yesterday evening, after the whole bla bla future leaders of the world thing
i sat in the smoking lounge with three norwegians, one of whom studies African American studies
the bar is called time after thyme, get it...
two iowa housewives asked me to be their spy, flirted with me, bought
me drinks (southern comfort), and asked me where they could get some pot.
am reading james baldwin in between, very nice and quite good, the ending is a little too 'revelations' for me though
'this afternoon me and the elfin belgian are skipping a lecture to go into 'town'
then ill go to a lecture, tomorrow the mountains, a 'historic'
'steakhouse' and more lectures"

sun above the snowy rocky mountain forests


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Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

elk and tourists


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Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

DSCF0687


DSCF0687
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

Thursday, February 24, 2005

short bloggery from work

after my two days at the temple of israel, taping a middle east conference, running down the secret passageways and copying the tapes before the speakers themselves had gotten downstairs with the dodgy elevator, the return to class felt strange. our reading list was particularly insane this week, as it included most of t.s. eliot’s major poems. i compared the intense layers of religious references to the wild layering on buffy, meaning to say that one could make annotated editions of every major text, but they should at least be enjoyable on their own. my professor thankfully pulled the rug from under my feet, saying that not every text is as ridulously referency as eliot or buffy. we ended up mainly talking about the shortest, the hollow men (the “this is the way the world ends” one) and my ‘huddle of praying zombies’ interpretation was surprisingly popular, even though my awful pun ‘the hum of humanity’ was way too pretentious to even repeat here. more poetry next week; wallace stevens who apparently wrote his crazy poems on the way to work as an insurance person in hartford, connecticut.
my other professor, who used to write for rolling stone, the one i still owe two papers (even though we’ve been avoiding the subject), really liked the flaky mix me and g. put together for our twice-semesterly, mainly gin-oriented cocktail party, but then again who can resist petula clark singing “downtown” in german, or a tragic tango version of “smells like teen spirit.” the weirdest thing about this internship is the soundtrack, for weeks now i have spent two days a week listening to mid-nineties alternative music (today is massive attack and portishead, yesterday brought radiohead and placebo, last week it was the verve and depeche mode.) songs i only purposely put on to flashback and reminisce, never to concentrate when i’m writing a four page synopsis on an epic young adult novel about flooding and cloning.

Monday, February 21, 2005

the gates three


DSCF0328
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

i didn't see showercurtains or a waste of money, just the sudden sense of happening on a yang zimou filmset, daggers about to fly through the branches, snowflakes landing on eyebrows in close up.

gates two


DSCF0330
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.


some short parables written while watching a french film about french people:

12. the day it started to rain bullets was the day the father told his children it was not safe for them to go outside. the children wore their ponchos and filled balloons with water. they walked into the bathroom, threw the balloons at the ceiling, and complained about the weather.

15. a new brand of terrorists uses high definition video technology to re-edit james bond movies to include intricate plot twists concerning his multi-racial bastard children and their increasingly violent demands for child support.

24. after a tsunami washes away part of the continent, the father explained to his son what a tidal wave is. he asked the boy how he felt about this. the boy answered: good. confused, the father asked again and the child said: bad. the father told the boy to draw a picture of the tsunami. when the father came to take a look, the boy was gone and the drawing completely erased. he called for the boy and found him on his father's bed. standing on his head, his feet cycling in the air. the father thought, this would be a good time to take a picture of his son. he could print it out and hang it upside down; the boy would be walking on air.

gates one


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Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

this is what happens when you end up in central park before eight am after a heavy snowfall

Thursday, February 10, 2005

howard hughes and diane lane

after tuesday's lackluster post, some short, and hopefully more eventful, facts about my existence. yesterday brought tiny raindrops and a morning filled with editing other people's responses to a new ludovine sagnier and sure dutch hit for natalie portman and amos gitai about multicultural women bonding in the middle east. after that, the new york premiere of cannes winners, oldboy and assayas' clean. i can't believe i forgot about the twist ending to oldboy, but i guess that makes it such a powerful film (i've spent quite alot of time now finding synonyms for 'powerful' and also, strangely, 'distraught'). clean, however, was underwhelming, boring even.
today i managed to quite viciously review a new horror film in the ring vein: "its cheap gory thrills are a disgrace to what could have been an interesting vehicle for an underused actress." (a short and cheesy description: "a bored housewife spends the scariest week in her life trying to prevent her husband's death from happening, thereby disturbing the laws of cause and effect, and changing the future of her family forever.") the other script was a very wonderful, confessions of a dangerous mind-style, comic drama, apparently based on a true story, about a man who got a million dollar advance for the autobiography of the original aviator, howard hughes. tonight will bring a new and revised edition of my writing worksop, now if only i had written something that didn't involve "obvious plot beats" or "very marketable to a female audience"...

Tuesday, February 08, 2005

snippets of waiting

so i'm sitting in the computerlab with some defrosting quails in my bag waiting to meet my roommate and his friend, both precursors of mine at the internship. just a very short post as i'm already being hunted out for a computer class. my class on kafka was suitably disturbing and anti-climactic: you think you understand what he's saying and then he turns it right around: "in the fight between you and the world back the world." there really is no comma there. should there be? is that the point?
tomorrow brings the brighter weather back again, i hope, and a few hours of internship, some more of administration and naipaul and unamuno's mist (apparently a pre-post-modern masterpiece), and i almost forgot i'm going to be seeing oldboy (again) and assayas's clean at the lincoln center. (i have no idea what this class is about, surveys? john kerry?)
thursday more interning, maybe synopsizing gregg araki's hilariously gruesome new script, crEEEps, filled with scantily clad teenagers exploding into bugs and setting each other on fire while playing with their ipods. this weekend i'm finally going to see christo's work in the park with karen's deliciously british ex-landlady and friday i'm going out to lunch with a fellow dutch expat, seeing nobody knows later in the day i hope.

some bits of my new job: pre-movie criticism

Burrows, a neurotic ex-cop, and Siri, a jaded insurance investigator, try to get to the bottom of a series of unfortunate and improbable incidents while trailed by a documentary filmmaker. A road trip brings them closer together and gives the profiling genius a chance to catch the killer he failed to catch before.
Cosmological references abound and chronology is eschewed as the lives of Michael, an awkward astronomer, and Caroline, a mysterious French photographer, are twisted apart by fate and coincidence. A strong twist ending reveals a ghostly overlap between two lovers at the same place but at a different time.
Sadie Blake, a nosy reporter, vows revenge after a gang of vampires turns her into one of their own. She tracks them down and kills them one by one with the help of a policeman mourning his daughter's death by fangs.

my friend jack, fled into the bathroom


DSCF0178
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

b/w version of roommate portrait


DSCF0142
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

some shots of last weekend's party in my suite


DSCF0211
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

Monday, February 07, 2005

the sun is out and i'm at work

i started my internship last week and it is honestly the best job in the world: a lovely twenty minute walk through the village (today just in a suit and scarf, free fulbright concert at the lincoln center tonight), with the essential addition of the many squirrels on washington square. an actual lunchbreak, which i haven't had in years, not since my days at virgin megatore at least. the first day i got a ghostly lovestory, filled with cosmological science facts and a plot structure that looped in on itself, the second a quasi lesbionic vampire tale of revenge and redemption. because my boss is leaving for berlin on wednesday, i was called in on monday morning on this new winona ryder movie about the darwin awards, which i am now merrily commenting on before my class on nigerian literature (winona, nigeria, winona, nigeria, winona). more pictures of my newly debaucherous roomates and that lovely morning walk will follow, as well as haunting snippets of my reports before they are sent to tokyo and all my silly references vanish in translation. love f.

Sunday, January 23, 2005

out the window


out the window
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

i really like my new camera, especially in combination with the contrast slide in iphoto. everything turns these wonderful hues, and the widescreen cropping just gives the image a lot of story. this one was taken out my window of the sidewalk below, just in front of the new blockbuster that opened up there last week. you can see the face of my building reflected in the windshield, very pretty

snowy blue street (very 8 mile)


bluestreet
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

in my newly found tradition of fresh pictures from the gritty streets of chelsea, the next photos will be more arty i promise.

seventies bike in the sunday snow


bikesnow
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

black white street


blackwhitestreet
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

more snow, more images

Saturday, January 22, 2005

empty streets ouside


snowcrossing
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

another look out my window


snowburger
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

a lonely cyclist braves the storm


snowbike
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

picturesque winter scenes on eight avenue


snowgeneral
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

just to show off my new camera again. it's been snowing the entire day now, cnn is going into a frenzy as usual. the streets are very quiet, new yorkers really go into their shell on these kinds of days (and if you notice that all these pictures were taken out of my window, you'll know i am more than happy to join them).

Friday, January 21, 2005

liner notes for ny resolutions november 2004

Crackling, a phone rings, a distant friend finally calls back, in the background faraway snatches of ballroom dancing, borrowed crooning. It all dissolves into the earthy sound of an acoustic guitar, grubbily strummed, accompanied by an Australian voice. And that’s how it begins, finally all the pieces flow together, all I need now is a title.
Since January 2001 I have been making monthly, or bi-monthly, sometimes seasonal mixes for my friends. The series is called Resolutions, for the holiday tradition of optimistically filling our plate with more than we could ever chew. I do this because I sometimes am not that good a friend; I don’t often reply to missed calls, text messages, emails, or pretty handwritten letters. The reasons for my bad behavior in this area of human contact remain obscure to me, although they probably include occasional feelings of insignificance, apathy, and general inadequacy. Do not take this to mean that I am not glad when friends call, or entertaining when they throw parties, just that my detailed knowledge of social mores does not necessarily implies that I will act on these guidelines, do as I promised, deliver on time.
As you might have guessed, I deal with pressure very badly, and expectations are even worse; I freeze, completely and shamefully unable to pick up a phone and get to work. The last mix I sent out to my friends was compiled through spring, distributed in June, and then, all through the summer holidays, my move to New York, registration, midterms: radio silence. Sure, I sent my change of address, replied to some of their kind emails, remembered some birthdays. But I forgot more. Marked emails unread to make myself reply, building an enormous backlog of unanswered guilt. It’s the reason why my university education took seven years instead of four. When a postcard makes you nervous, imagine what happens when you get a deadline, a second one, another incomplete. Procrastination is not the word; paralysis comes close.
The CD’s seem to help, when I am satisfied with them, that is (for every successful disc there are stillborns, misguided attempts at conceptual epics). So far this one sounds good. The third song is short, a choppy remix of a pianoforte piece leading into a staple of my ‘resolutions’, Christina Aguilera, albeit layered onto pretentious French shoegazer (exactly what it sounds like - music played by bored art students who look at their toes while noodling on their instruments). Then continue with dopplering independent hip-hop by Subtle, before Azure Ray clocks in with a crispy version of New Resolution, a song emblematic of my ‘struggle’, constantly remixing resolutions, making excuses, buying envelopes. It must be said though, that it’s not all bad; the constant searh for new music, my addiction, makes it bearable, new music fed intravenously into my laptop daily, literally thousands of songs fragmenting my hard drive, each one a possible deal breaker, the song that makes you smile walking down the streets looking up at the raindrops falling parallel to the glistening skyscrapers.
Yet there’s a disturbing amount of Scandinavia here: Norwegian Annie with her somehow mournfully glacial love song to the dancefloor (Heartbeat), East Village idiot Dungen with his carnivalesque freak out (Ta Det Lugnt, which my Swedish roommate, somewhat disappointingly translates as ‘Take it easy’) and The Concretes with an overhauled version of their Chico which sounds like a retired doo-wop troupe kidnapped by a band of dazed au-pairs in Montmartre. Then there are the classics: Funkadelic, the Left Banke, and Moby Grape, all semi-obscure songs from the records I left at home. A spoken interlude, where the eighties popstar leaves a message to his wife about his recent return from space, “It would be lovely to see you again, I imagine the kids are quite grown up by now, I suppose. Still, that’s progress for you.”
I compile the songs, painstakingly mix them together, re-edit and title, then send them in the mail, or get on trains to deliver them personally. I am now working on #29, and this mix is supposed to tell my friends back home about my new life in New York City. The songs should be about new beginnings, navigating the grid of the city, the tangerine glow of the Empire State Building outside my window as the sun sets earlier, the artistic frenzy leading up to the election (the embarrassed quiet after), the night when friends of new friends led me right past the long queues into an exclusive club where I saw that celebrity heiress who had so much plastic surgery she looks like a feline VISA-addict. The artists should be local, but not exclusively so, and I would need at least a single representative from the Low Countries (to let my ‘old’ friends know they haven’t been forgotten or, God forbid, replaced). There are rules to the mixtape, John Cusack explains this in High Fidelity, an inviting opener, no more than one song per artist, and my personal additive: relative obscurity. I want the songs to be fresh, and if they are not, they should sound crisp in the bright winter glaze.
As another actor, portraying another sad male obsessionist, once conjectured, most human activities can be divided in thirty-minute sections, the middle is the hardest, forty minutes have passed and the listener will have finished their day-old dishes, laundry or make-up ritual. There should be a marked change in mood and a drop in volume helps. Mine comes in the form of a piano ballad with a voice-over by the original space cadet, Captain Kirk himself. He reads a letter from an estranged father trying to reconnect with his daughters. He says the wrong things, does not apologize, and meanwhile Aimee Mann and Ben Folds sing the chorus: “Above the quiet, there’s a buzz. That’s. Me. Trying.” Me being ironic more like; self-mockery the ever-available modus operandi for the self-conscious.
The sequencing is the best part: the songs are all there, I just have to look for the hidden flow, the funny juxtapositions, the one song that feels out of place, too much. This phase is extremely micro-managing, burning dub-plates, hearing how it feels walking through the dairy aisle in my supermarket, in the park by the rollerblade disco, on empty escalators, Saturday night at 4 a.m. in bed with the window open and the Chelsea crowd fading out. It should feel true, but just a little more optimistic. (I don’t want people to think I’m depressed just because of my penchant for troubled acoustic boys with badly tuned guitars.) Each new track should make you forget the last song, seconds into the next. Turn a pencil into a drumstick, get your hips itching and sparingly twitch the tear ducts.
This is a mix that makes most sense piped into your ears, finger on the volume trigger, keeping step even when circumventing city roadworks. It ends seventy-eight minutes later with that same crackling it started out with, a Swedish accent sings the story of a wronged song, left at the department of forgotten songs by her A-side sister. I feel glad, can’t wait to get out there, test the waves of traffic with this new soundtrack, I’ll send the finished copies off after I finish my next paper (a comparison of irrational characters of the literature of modernity), then I’ll buy those pretty rainbow CD cases, padded envelopes, compare shipping prices, start burning.
I guess I have my title, NY Resolutions, or even better in lowercase: ny resolutions #1, the local abbreviation doubling for the universally Scandinavian word for ‘new’, a promise I know I can’t keep.

cab


cab
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

pigeon


nypigeon
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

Thursday, January 20, 2005

new camera and t-shirt


tshirt
Originally uploaded by nyresolutions.

hi everybody, just got back to new york. i am slowly getting used to new temeratures and timezones. my new camera sure helps, i'll take it out on the streets soon, for now i'll just post this picture of a t-shirt i bought from the lovely and funny kimya dawson, who i saw perform at 'happy ending' a very fancy new york bar hidden behind a hot pink awning that says health club in chinese and english. she played my favorite song ('being cool') and was adorably shy. as i've said before, more later, with pictures...